West Elizabeth A, Carelli Regina M
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
J Neurosci. 2016 Jan 27;36(4):1128-39. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2976-15.2016.
Nucleus accumbens (NAc) neurons encode features of stimulus learning and action selection associated with rewards. The NAc is necessary for using information about expected outcome values to guide behavior after reinforcer devaluation. Evidence suggests that core and shell subregions may play dissociable roles in guiding motivated behavior. Here, we recorded neural activity in the NAc core and shell during training and performance of a reinforcer devaluation task. Long-Evans male rats were trained that presses on a lever under an illuminated cue light delivered a flavored sucrose reward. On subsequent test days, each rat was given free access to one of two distinctly flavored foods to consume to satiation and were then immediately tested on the lever pressing task under extinction conditions. Rats decreased pressing on the test day when the reinforcer earned during training was the sated flavor (devalued) compared with the test day when the reinforcer was not the sated flavor (nondevalued), demonstrating evidence of outcome-selective devaluation. Cue-selective encoding during training by NAc core (but not shell) neurons reliably predicted subsequent behavioral performance; that is, the greater the percentage of neurons that responded to the cue, the better the rats suppressed responding after devaluation. In contrast, NAc shell (but not core) neurons significantly decreased cue-selective encoding in the devalued condition compared with the nondevalued condition. These data reveal that NAc core and shell neurons encode information differentially about outcome-specific cues after reinforcer devaluation that are related to behavioral performance and outcome value, respectively.
Many neuropsychiatric disorders are marked by impairments in behavioral flexibility. Although the nucleus accumbens (NAc) is required for behavioral flexibility, it is not known how NAc neurons encode this information. Here, we recorded NAc neurons during a training session in which rats learned that a cue predicted a specific reward and during a test session when that reward value was changed. Although encoding in the core during training predicted the ability of rats to change behavior after the reward value was altered, the NAc shell encoded information about the change in reward value during the test session. These findings suggest differential roles of the core and shell in behavioral flexibility.
伏隔核(NAc)神经元编码与奖励相关的刺激学习和动作选择特征。在强化物贬值后,利用预期结果值的信息来指导行为时,伏隔核是必需的。有证据表明,核心和壳亚区在引导动机行为中可能发挥不同的作用。在此,我们在强化物贬值任务的训练和执行过程中记录了伏隔核核心和壳中的神经活动。对雄性Long-Evans大鼠进行训练,使其在 illuminated cue light下按压杠杆可获得加味蔗糖奖励。在随后的测试日,每只大鼠可自由获取两种口味截然不同的食物中的一种,直至吃饱,然后立即在消退条件下对杠杆按压任务进行测试。与强化物不是饱足口味(未贬值)的测试日相比,当训练期间获得的强化物是饱足口味(贬值)时,大鼠在测试日的按压次数减少,这证明了结果选择性贬值的证据。伏隔核核心(而非壳)神经元在训练期间的线索选择性编码可靠地预测了随后的行为表现;也就是说,对线索做出反应的神经元百分比越高,大鼠在贬值后抑制反应的能力就越好。相比之下,与未贬值条件相比,伏隔核壳(而非核心)神经元在贬值条件下显著减少了线索选择性编码。这些数据表明,强化物贬值后,伏隔核核心和壳神经元分别对与行为表现和结果值相关的结果特异性线索进行不同的信息编码。
许多神经精神疾病的特征是行为灵活性受损。虽然行为灵活性需要伏隔核(NAc),但尚不清楚伏隔核神经元如何编码此信息。在此,我们在大鼠学习线索预测特定奖励的训练过程中以及奖励值改变的测试过程中记录了伏隔核神经元。虽然训练期间核心中的编码预测了奖励值改变后大鼠改变行为的能力,但伏隔核壳在测试过程中编码了有关奖励值变化的信息。这些发现表明核心和壳在行为灵活性中具有不同的作用。